ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will hold a seven-day anti-polio drive from today, Monday, to vaccinate over 45 million children against the disease, state-run media reported as Islamabad grapples to contain the infection.
Polio is a paralyzing disease with no cure, and multiple doses of the oral polio vaccine — along with completing the routine immunization schedule for children under five — are crucial to building immunity against the virus. Pakistan, which has reported six polio cases so far in 2025, has planned three major vaccination campaigns in the first half of the year, with additional rounds scheduled for April and May.
The seven-day campaign from Apr. 21-27 will be the second nationwide anti-polio drive to be held this year, which aims to vaccinate over 45 million children against the disease. Sharif on Sunday formally kicked off the campaign by administering polio drops to a few children during a ceremony in Islamabad.
“A week-long anti- polio vaccination campaign begins across the country on Monday,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported.
“During the drive, field teams of health department will go door to door to administer anti-polio vaccine drops to over 45 million children under the age of five years.”
A day earlier, PM Sharif requested parents to get their children vaccinated against polio.
“It is my request to parents all over Pakistan that they help us out in administering polio drops to their children,” Sharif said at the ceremony. “Help our teams in the field so that this virus can be eliminated for good.”
The Pakistani premier thanked Islamabad’s local and international partners for helping fight the disease, saying he had no doubt Pakistan would stem the spread of the infection.
Sharif said the government has undertaken stringent security measures in sensitive areas for polio volunteers. He called on authorities to mobilize the public so that they become “soldiers” in the fight against poliovirus.
In 2024, Pakistan reported an alarming 74 polio cases. Along with Afghanistan, it remains one of the only two countries where polio is still endemic.
Pakistan’s polio program, launched in 1994, has faced persistent challenges including vaccine misinformation and resistance from some religious hard-liners who claim immunization is a foreign conspiracy to sterilize Muslim children or a guise for Western espionage.
Militant groups have also repeatedly targeted and killed polio vaccination workers. Gunmen attacked a vehicle and abducted two polio workers who were on their way home after visiting a health facility in Dera Ismail Khan, a district in restive Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, earlier this month.